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Showtime
Championship Boxing
Sergei Liakhovich
vs. Shannon Briggs

November 4, 2006
Chase Field
Phoenix, Arizona
9 PM ET/PT
WBO Heavyweight Title
Bout
Champion Sergei
Liakhovich (23-1, 14 KOs) vs. 3rd ranked Shannon Briggs
(47-4-1, 41 KOs)
________________________________________________
World Heavyweight
Championship:
Liakhovich To Defend Crown
Against Briggs
NEW YORK - With all four world
heavyweight champions hailing from the former Soviet Union, much has
been made of America's lack of
heavyweight mettle. Can Brooklyn's Shannon "The Cannon"
Briggs
crash the Eastern-bloc party
when he challenges World Boxing Organization (WBO) heavyweight titleholder
Sergei "The White
Wolf" Liakhovich on Saturday, Nov. 4.
You'll have to tune in to the
sensational match up, a Don King-promoted fight card airing live at 9 p.m.
ET/PT
(delayed on the West Coast) on
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING from Chase Field, home of Major
League Baseball's Arizona
Diamondbacks.
When Oleg Maskaev
knocked out Hasim Rahman recently, the United States-a nation that
spawned such
greats as John L.
Sullivan, the two Jack's, Johnson and Dempsey, Joe
Louis and Muhammad Ali
among others-found itself
without a world heavyweight champion for the first time in memory.
"My day is coming, and I am
going to give my all," said Briggs, the WBO No. 3 contender (47-4-1, 41
KOs).
"I respect Liakhovich. He is
the man. I regard him as the true champion because he beat Lamon
Brewster,
who beat Wladimir Klitschko.
I am in a tough fight, but I am going in there to knock Liakhovich out.''
The heavy-handed Briggs has
incorporated a "seek and destroy" mindset during an 11-fight winning
streak
(all by knockout) dating back
to March 2003. The days of Briggs feeling out a foe or pacing himself are
over.
"The people want to see blood.
They want action," Briggs said of his newfound method of operating. "I
hate
to sound barbaric because I am
not barbaric outside of the ring, but this is a job and I treat is as a
job. The
customers are getting what
they want."
The heavy hitter also has
become heavy. Bleached-gold dreadlocks and all, Briggs weighed 273 pounds
when he scored a third-round
TKO over Chris Koval in his last start on May 24, 2006, in New
York. Briggs
was 269 pounds when he knocked
out Dick Ryan in the fourth round on March 18, 2006, in Fort Smith,
Ark.
Scales have been banned in
Briggs' home. He will not step on one at the gym.
"I hate scales," said Briggs,
best known for taking a 12-round decision over George Foreman on
Nov. 22,
1997. "I do not weigh myself
anymore. I am simply trying to perfect the art of the one-punch KO."
Liakhovich (23-1, 14 KOs), of
Scottsdale, Ariz., by way of Vitebsk, Belarus, will make the first defense
of
the title he won on a 12-round
unanimous decision over American and then-WBO champion Lamon
Brewster in an
excellent scrap April 1, 2006, in Cleveland, on SHOWTIME.
In what is sure to be a
candidate for Fight of the Year, Liakhovich entered the bout as a huge
underdog
having remained inactive for
the previous 16 months. The surprisingly light-footed and quick Liakhovich
won
the last five rounds on one
scorecard, the final four on another and three out of the last four rounds
on the
third card to win the
championship bout 117-110, 115-112 and 115-113.
"I answered Brewster every
time," said Liakhovich, who went down in the seventh round of a see-saw
brawl.
"Then, he felt my power.
"Brewster was a great
champion. He hits real hard with power and has a lot of will. But, after
the fourth
round, I knew I was
controlling the fight. Brewster hits like a mule. I felt like I did the
right thing when I took
a knee at the end of round
seven. I almost sent him down twice, too.
"I am not looking past Briggs.
I said after my last fight I would give Brewster a rematch after he had
time to
recover. If we fight again, it
would be an easy win for me. But my main goal is to unify the titles."
Liakhovich has won seven in a
row, including a 10-round unanimous decision over Dominick Guinn on
Dec.
3, 2004, in Atlantic City. A
big and physically strong boxer-puncher with first-rate talent, Liakhovich
outpointed the then-highly
regarded Guinn 97-93 and 96-94 twice.
Little was known about
Liakhovich entering the Guinn bout. However, following his unrelenting
throw-down
with the hard-hitting
Brewster, he has been acknowledged as a naturally athletic, patient, yet
tough and
durable guy. Liakhovich
possesses nice range and size to go along with thudding power. He proved
his heart
by participating in perhaps
the most exciting, and vicious heavyweight match of 2006.
In his last two starts,
Liakhovich also has displayed impressive overall talent and skills. Not
easily
discouraged, he appears to
wake up when hit. He prefers to shoot combinations from all angles, but
may be
at his best when he can press
forward with a ramrod left jab and work the inside. An excellent body
puncher,
Liakhovich surprised some fans
in the Guinn match by effectively moving off of his combinations and
exhibiting nimble footwork for
a big man. At six-feet, four-inches tall, Liakhovich is the same height as
Briggs.
One of four European
heavyweight champions, Liakhovich is a quiet, soft-spoken individual, but
does not
shy away from speaking his
mind.
"Nobody wants to fight me, and
that is a problem," Liakhovich said. "This is not about a belt. Everybody
saw
what I did to Brewster. The
heavyweight division is not bad. It is not great but it is good. It has
pretty good
fighters, but not great
fighters. Somebody needs to step up and show everybody who the real
heavyweight
champion is. That is what I am
trying to do. I want to unify."
"Right now, there are no U.S.
champions in the heavyweight division," Liakhovich continued. "But, all of
us
who own world titles deserve
them. All of us work hard and we are smart."
Managed by Ivaylo Gotzev
and trained by the respected Kenny Weldon, Liakhovich wrestled for
three
years before switching to
boxing at age 12. He had an outstanding amateur career (135-15) and was
the
1996 Olympic Games
representative for Belarus at super heavyweight. He drew a bye in his
first fight, but
dropped a disputed 10-9
decision to Paea Wolfgramm of Tonga in his second.
"One second I was ahead by
nine points, the next second I lost by one point," said Liakhovich, who
still is
befuddled by the decision. "Paea
won a silver medal, after a loss to Klitschko."
Liakhovich turned pro at age
22 on Christmas Day 1998, in Minsk, Belarus. His initial three starts were
in
Russia. He moved to the U.S.
in 1999. Liakhovich suffered his lone loss to Maurice Harris on June 1,
2002,
in his 17th start. Behind on
the cards, the Russian was dropped in the ninth round and counted out at
1:31.
Before signing to defend
against Briggs, Liakhovich called out the world heavyweight champions.
"The guy I
want is Wladimir Klitschko,"
he said. "But he doesn't want tough fights. He won't fight me.''
Ironically, Briggs thought his
next assignment would be against Klitschko, but the fight against the
International Boxing
Federation (IBF) kingpin did not transpire.
"I was led to believe for
months that it would happen," Briggs said. "Wladimir is an excellent boxer
and a
terrific offensive fighter,
but defensively and mentally, he is not there. He avoided me.
"My career has had its share
of ups and downs, but I am thrilled to be in the spot I am in. It is going
to be a
great fight. Liakhovich is a
very skillful guy. This is a much harder fight than Klitschko."
Do not look for Briggs, a guy
who moved in with an aunt in the same tough Brownsville, Brooklyn
neighborhood that spawned
former heavyweight champions Mike Tyson and Riddick Bowe, to
back down.
"I was an only child, but I
was pretty much like a homeless kid," Briggs said. "My mom became sick and
had a drug problem. I was in
the streets. I would stay with relatives sometimes, friends, sometimes a
train
station. I would go from place
to place, but I always made a way. I am a survivor."
Despite the environment,
Briggs avoided major trouble and got into boxing. He went to a gym the
first time
in his mid-teens and began
boxing as an amateur at 18. The 1992 U.S. National amateur fighter, Briggs
was
talented enough to take a shot
at the '92 Olympic Games, but a hand injury ended the dream.
"Boxing saved my life," he
said. "It got me off of the street. It gave me a place to go. It was not
my own
home, but it was a safe place
where I found some type of structure. I was around people and not just
running
the streets and getting into
trouble. Tough times came about, too, but I was fortunate."
Briggs turned pro at age 20 on
July 24, 1992, and won his initial 25 fights. He did not lose a single
round,
and scored 31 knockdowns and
20 knockouts during that span. His first loss came on a third-round
knockout to Darroll Wilson
on March 15, 1996. Wilson scored a spectacular one-punch knockdown and
Briggs was counted out at
2:17. Briggs rebounded to win five in a row, including the controversial
majority
decision that retired Foreman
and earned Briggs the linear heavyweight title.
On March 28, 1998, Briggs met
Lennox Lewis in Atlantic City and nearly won the World Boxing
Council
(WBC) title in dramatic
fashion. In the bout's opening seconds, he staggered Lewis with a right
hand that
nearly knocked him through the
ropes. But, Lewis wound up winning by fifth-round knockout.
The Brooklyn native went 2-0-1
before losing a shocking eight-round nod to Sedreck Fields on April 27,
2000,
in New York. "Although I
thought I won, losing to Fields was very embarrassing," said Briggs, who
came up
short by upset scores 77-75
twice and 76-76.
Briggs won his next four
starts by first-round knockout before dropping a lopsided decision to
Jameel
McCline on April 27,
2002 in New York. McCline triumphed 99-90 on all three scorecards. "I had
a back
injury," said Briggs, who
weighed a then-career-high 268. "I fought at 30 percent."
Briggs, who has fairly fast
hands and decent boxing skills, has not lost since. He is managed by
Bonnie
Nelson, co-trained by
James Bashir and Milton Lacroix, and promoted by Don King
Productions.
SHOWTIME CHAMPIONSHIP BOXING's
Steve Albert will call the action from ringside alongside expert
analyst Al Bernstein.
Jim Gray will serve as roving reporter with special correspondent
Karyn Bryant.
The executive producer of the
SHOWTIME telecast will be David Dinkins, Jr. with Bob
Dunphy directing.
- Press Release issued by
Showtime with a little editing from us (color, highlights, etc...)
Subject to change
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(9/14/06)
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